Does Self-Determination Predict the School Engagement of Four Different Motivation Types in Adolescence?

Raufelder, Diana; Regner, Nicola; Drury, Kate; Eid, Michael

Educational Psychology, v36 n7 p1239-1260 2016

In order to enhance our understanding of inter-individual differences in scholastic motivation, this study examined if self-determination predicts the school engagement of four different motivation types (MT) in a large sample of adolescent students (N = 1088) from Brandenburg, Germany: (1) peer-dependent MT, (2) teacher-dependent MT, (3) peer-and-teacher-dependent MT and (4) peer-and-teacher-independent MT. Using structural equation modelling (SEM), the four types were first compared on latent variables (perceived self-determination and school engagement) and then, a latent multigroup SEM was conducted to test whether self-determination (competence, relatedness and autonomy) would predict emotional and behavioural school engagement separately by MT. The findings underscore the relevance of the typology as well as important inter-individual differences in the association between students' psychological needs (competence, relatedness and autonomy) and their school engagement.